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    ian mcewan

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    Introducere Ian McEwan is an English novelist and screnwriter. He was born on june 21‚1948‚ in Aldershot‚England. His parents were David McEwan and Rose Lilian Violet .His father was a working Scotsman who had worked his way up through the army to the rank of major and his mother a local woman whose housband had died in the World War II‚leaving her with two children.  McEwan spent much of his childhood in British Military Bases in England ‚ Singapore and Libya‚where his

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    Ian Mcewan

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    Critique‚ 52:55–73‚ 2011 Copyright © Taylor & Francis Group‚ LLC ISSN: 0011-1619 print/1939-9138 online DOI: 10.1080/00111610903380055 Who Killed Robbie and Cecilia? Reading and Misreading Ian McEwan’s Atonement M ARTIN JACOBI ABSTRACT: Ian McEwan’s 2001 novel‚ Atonement‚ is seen by many as a meditation on misreading‚ and this article argues that the author not only dramatizes misreading and implicitly warns readers against misreading‚ but also induces his readers into misreading. Although

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    Atonement By Ian Mcewan

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    BIOGRAPHICAL Ian McEwan was born to a Scottish army major. During his lifetime‚ he moved from country to country with his family living in different places like East Asia‚ Germany‚ and North Africa where his father was stationed at the time. While in Northern Africa‚ at the age of 12‚ he was separated from his parents; McEwan was sent back to Britain to attend a Boarding School. He was separated from his family for many years of his life (“Biography”). In Atonement‚ McEwan brings his life into

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    Saturday by Ian Mcewan

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    Excerpt from Saturday by Ian McEwan: Some hours before dawn Henry Perowne‚ a neurosurgeon‚ wakes to find himself already in motion‚ pushing back the covers from a sitting position‚ and then rising to his feet. It’s not clear to him when exactly he became conscious‚ nor does it seem relevant. He’s never done such a thing before‚ but he isn’t alarmed or even faintly surprised‚ for the movement is easy‚ and pleasurable in his limbs‚ and his back and legs feel unusually strong. He stands there‚ naked

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    Saturday By Ian Mcewan

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    In my introductory essay to Saturday‚ by Ian McEwan‚ my written piece called Nature‚ Nurture and Nine eleven‚ attempted to explore the themes of a the main characters (Perowne and Baxter) in a post nine eleven world. I also dessicated the ‘nature vs nurture’ theory and what makes people turn into what they are under the shadow of a darwinian themes that McIwan alludes to. I believe that my paper raised interesting ideas and am happy with the points that I raised. However‚ the downfall of my writing

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    IB SL English 2 Commentary on The Comfort of Strangers In one part of the novel‚ The Comfort of Strangers‚ the English writer Ian McEwan describes the admiration with which his male character‚ Robert‚ contemplates his sisters playing dress up. Though the speaker’s age is never divulged‚ we readily jump to the conclusion that he is around ten years old because of the childish and rudimentary language. The structure of the sentences is also very reflective of the child’s young age‚ as well as

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    Atonement By Ian Mcewan

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    Judging Lines Between Reality and Imagination in Atonement As I read Atonement‚ by Ian McEwan‚ on the beach in Long Beach Island I was confronted with a somewhat new style of writing that I did not recognize. The splitting of the novel into three main parts only made sense to me after I had finished it; the account of the crime that took place at the Tallis household‚ Robbie Turner’s adventures at war‚ and Briony’s tales as a nurse were all connected and ended up “coming together” much more smoothly

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    ENDURING LOVE Ian McEwan A dictionary defines the word addictive as being: wholly devoted to something‚ a slave to another and in a state of wanting more. Ian McEwan claimed that he wanted to write an opening chapter that had the same effect as a highly addictive drug. In my opinion he has achieved in doing this. At the end of chapter one the reader is left needing more information about the characters introduced and what tragedy actually occurred. McEwan took the definition

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    Ian Mcewan Atonement

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    migraines‚ her brother living away and her sister of studying‚ Briony is virtually an only child‚ left only with the company of her imagination. She was described as compulsively orderly. “One of those children possessed by the idea to have the world ‘just so’. Briony’s craving to manipulate and control‚ and also her perception of how Robbie spoilt her play‚ leads her to committing her crime. Her overactive imagination causes her to misinterpret a scene between Robbie and Cecelia‚ and then later catches

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    impossible to find. How like Hermione Lola was‚ to remain guiltless while others destroyed themselves at her prompting (McEwan 138). Like Briony‚ Emily completely misinterprets a situation‚ and as always‚ views Briony as completely innocent. This is not unlikely‚ as the household revolved around Briony‚ and she could do little wrong. Emily‚ her mother‚ adored her innocence and wanted so badly to preserve it. Her tainted view of her own daughter goes to show how deceiving Briony’s character truly was

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